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How characters from Alison Bechdel's past shook her out of her memoir-writing kick
How characters from Alison Bechdel's past shook her out of her memoir-writing kick

CBC

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • CBC

How characters from Alison Bechdel's past shook her out of her memoir-writing kick

Nearly 20 years after her breakout memoir, Fun Home, American cartoonist Alison Bechdel is still unearthing new truths about that period of her life. But this time, she's taking a look at her personal story through fiction, with her new comic novel, Spent. In Spent, she explores the life of a cartoonist, also named Alison Bechdel, who grapples with her complicated relationship with capitalism, community and activism after the success of her memoir and its subsequent TV adaptation. "When I was younger, I did lead a more communal life," Bechdel said on Bookends with Mattea Roach. "I lived in a communal house. I went out and did political activities and was involved in my community. Over time, I really stopped doing that — and it's a bunch of factors. Part of it's getting older, part of it is being in a relationship, but a big part of it was that I was living very much on the edge until I was in my 40s, until Fun Home came out, and slowly saved my financial bacon." "Then I started making a lot of money, which was a very weird experience for someone who had formed their sense of self as an outsider and especially as a poor outsider." Bechdel, who is also known for her comic strip Dykes to Watch Out For and books Are You My Mother? and The Secret to Superhuman Strength, joined Roach to revisit her debut memoir and how it shaped her return to fiction. Mattea Roach: You published your memoir, Fun Home, almost 20 years ago when you were 45. Now you're in your 60s. How has your relationship with the text evolved over the past nearly two decades? Alison Bechdel: It's funny to have this thing, this record of my life that is unchanging, like it's cast in stone. Even though I have found out lots of interesting information about various people or scenes in the book that would change the story if I were to write it now, it's done. This is the record and it's very odd to have to be constantly talking about it. The book was published almost 20 years ago, but I'm still talking about it as if it's a new thing to people. So that's a funny activity to get one's head around. How did it come about that you learned new information about some of the stuff that's depicted in the book? Was it a situation where people you knew read the book and said that's not actually how it was? I'll tell you one example of that, which is that I learned from my mother's best friend, that on the day that my father died, she had decided to not divorce him. Wow. Your dad died when he was hit by a truck and that was two weeks after your mom had asked for a divorce. And then there's some significant suggestion that it might have actually been intentional on his part. In this tumultuous time around between when I came out to my parents and when he died, which was just a couple of months, my mother had asked him for a divorce. And now I find out that she had been going to call that off. It just just casts her whole story into this really different light. It was already quite a tragic story, but now it's even worse, you know? Fun Home was made into this Broadway musical in 2015 and it won five Tonys. It's a very different work despite being adapted from your memoir. How did it feel to hand over a project that was so personal to be adopted for another medium? I didn't really know what I was doing. I knew I had sort of sidestepped an offer to option it for a film by asking for more money than they were willing to pay me. Which was a great relief. But then this offer came up for a musical and I didn't really have a connection to musicals. I've seen musicals, but I'm not like a big musical person. Somehow it seemed like it was different enough that I wouldn't mind if someone made a really bad musical out of my book — and the way that I would mind if it were a really bad film adaptation. I don't know what I was thinking now, but fortunately, that didn't happen. The people who made it did a very good job. It's a really good adaptation, but I always sort of think, "Wow, that was lucky." In my new book Spent, I explore what it would be like to really lose control of a creative project. Why did you want to explore this alternate path that you're grateful, in your real life, to not have gone down? Well, partly because once you become a writer in this world, everyone expects you to then somehow do something for TV or the great triumph is to get your book turned into a TV show and that just always strikes me as funny. Why can't we just make comic books that are comic books? I guess, obviously, because you make more money, but it's also just a cultural phenomenon. You know that if you're a writer, you have to grapple with this. Why did you want to revisit these characters from your weekly comic strips Dykes to Watch Out For who are now in late middle-age but are still living together in a communal housing situation? This book, Spent, was going to be another memoir. That's what I started doing after my comic strip. I retired the comic strip and began writing books about my life. And I thought that's what I was going to do forever because I really liked writing about actual life. Occasionally, someone would ask me, do you ever think you'll do fiction again? And I would just go blank. Fiction? How do you do that? And I couldn't even remember that I had actually done this fictional comic strip. But I realized early on in the work for this book that doing it as a memoir was going to be really boring. I just somehow didn't want to write about my actual life or actually read Marx or all the things I would have to do to intelligently discuss money or capitalism. In the moment that I threw that idea away, this other idea came in. What would really be funny is if I wrote about a cartoonist named Alison Bechdel who was trying to write a book about money and then it just all sort of sprang to life — and in that new vision, there were my old comic strip characters who were going to be my friends. It just was one of those lovely moments when something just comes into your mind fully formed, which hardly ever happens to me.

Amy Schumer MOCKS nemesis Hilaria Baldwin in shock gesture after star 'slammed' comedian in memoir
Amy Schumer MOCKS nemesis Hilaria Baldwin in shock gesture after star 'slammed' comedian in memoir

Daily Mail​

time16-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Amy Schumer MOCKS nemesis Hilaria Baldwin in shock gesture after star 'slammed' comedian in memoir

Amy Schumer made a apparent thinly-veiled dig at nemesis Hilaria Baldwin as she stepped out in New York City this week. The drama ramped up Baldwin, 41, furiously denounced an unnamed celebrity in her new memoir - and many readers suspect she may be discussing Schumer. Schumer was scathing about Hilaria in a 2023 comedy special, calling her a 'sociopath' and mocking her for pretending to be from Spain. After Baldwin was mocked on social media for seemingly showing off her new memoir in paparazzi shots, Schumer recreated the pose as she arrived at the Comedy Vs Cancer event at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer. A slimline Schumer, 42, who had admitted to taking diabetes and weight loss drug Mounjaro, enthusiastically pointed at a copy of The Anxious Generation by Jonathan Haidt. The star showed off her figure in a black bodycon dress and heels. After Baldwin was mocked on social media for seemingly showing off her new memoir in paparazzi shots, Schumer recreated the pose as she arrived at the Comedy Vs Cancer event at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer After she was papped holding the book - Manual Not Included - in a bizarre position, Baldwin took to Instagram to deny she had been plugging the tome for photographers. She said: 'I was on my way to a signing and they always tell me to bring at least one copy of the book with me. 'I wasn't trying to hold my book in a particular way... this was not about my book!' Schumer sparked drama in 2023 with the yoga teacher and her husband Alec Baldwin for having 'a von Trapp amount of children, and they named them all - I'm not sure, but very Spanish names like Jamón, Croqueta and Flamenco.' Now in her new book Manual Not Included, Hilaria, who has seven children, has blasted a nameless 'famous person' for discussing her and her family in a 'show.' Accusing the celebrity of saying 'nasty and untrue things' about her, Hilaria said she became 'sick with stress' when she first heard the news that she and her family would be a target of jokes in the special. Hilaria also said that the unnamed celebrity made 'derogatory remarks' about her children, and that at one point after the special dropped 'I found one of my boys crying in bed, asking why this woman was making fun of him.' Since tying the knot in 2012, Alec and Hilaria have welcomed seven children - which is in fact the exact number of Von Trapp progeny in The Sound Of Music. All seven children have indeed been given Spanish names, Carmen, 11, Rafael, nine, Leonardo, eight, Romeo, six, Eduardo, four, María, four, and Ilaria, two. In her new book, Hilaria accused the celebrity many readers think is Amy of discussing her in a show,' saying she 'even tried to bait me and Alec via Instagram.' She claimed she and Alec 'didn't engage with her and I guess I am proud of that,' adding that the situation 'made me mad at the system.' Hilaria continued: 'I don't need to use her name and I don't want any problems with her, and I would like to be left out of any articles that mention her, because she has nothing to do with me. A total stranger.' She recalled being 'sick with stress' upon hearing that a comedy special would come out in which she and her family would be mocked. On the day of the show's release, Hilaria went for a run but fell down because she was so preoccupied, and was left crying and bleeding from her leg. Hilaria wrote in her memoir that the special 'gutted me because I couldn't understand how someone could be so inherently cruel.' However she maintained that 'I don't need an apology' from the mystery star, witheringly stating: 'No matter what, I hope I never meet her.' In her 2023 Netflix special Emergency Contact, Amy claimed to have met Hilaria 'years ago' backstage at Saturday Night Live, where she allegedly spoke with a 'very thick Spanish accent' and described herself as being 'from España.' Amy joked: 'They have a von Trapp amount of children, and they named them all - I'm not sure, but very Spanish names like Jamón, Croqueta and Flamenco. She continued: 'And all of this would be fine and beautiful, except that "Hilaria from España" is actually Hillary from Boston. This woman is in no way Spanish. Her parents are not from Spain. No one in her life is from Spain. You're going: "What?!" Did you think I was just doing a really racist Spanish impression?' Amy added: 'So, I'm not trying to bully a sociopath. I have a point, OK? I think what had happened was she went to Spain. And I've been lucky enough to go to Spain. Some of you have been. It's great, right? Don't you love it? I loved it, too. But Hillary from Boston…loooved it!' She went on: 'My point is that all evidence points to this woman, since she met her husband, has straight up pretended to be from Spain.' Amy then brought up the legal battle Alec was facing over the fatal shooting on the set of his western Rust in November 2021. The saga culminated in a judge dismissing the involuntary manslaughter charges against Alec in connection with the death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins. Concluding her takedown of Hilaria, Amy vamped: 'And her husband shot someone... find someone who can stand you.' One week after the special bowed, an interview ran in which Hilaria said: 'It is a ridiculous thing to be cruel to another person,' via Romper.

EXCLUSIVE The 'truth' behind Kate Middleton's powerful support for Victoria and David Beckham amid their feud with Brooklyn and Nicola Peltz, friends tell RICHARD EDEN
EXCLUSIVE The 'truth' behind Kate Middleton's powerful support for Victoria and David Beckham amid their feud with Brooklyn and Nicola Peltz, friends tell RICHARD EDEN

Daily Mail​

time15-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE The 'truth' behind Kate Middleton's powerful support for Victoria and David Beckham amid their feud with Brooklyn and Nicola Peltz, friends tell RICHARD EDEN

The Duke of Sussex cruelly suggested in his memoir, Spare, that his brother, Prince William, had married Kate Middleton because she fitted the 'mould' of the , rather than solely for love. 'For so many people in the family, especially obviously the men, there can be a temptation or an urge to marry someone who would fit the mould as opposed to somebody who you perhaps are destined to be with,' Prince Harry wrote.

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